PAIG-E FOUR THE MICHITGAN DAILY . . .wa w +.ra a ...r as a. .. . a y Y t 71. i 1.-/ 1 Coed Assembly To Be Held Tonight BIG DOINGS AFOOT: Glee Clu bPlans Concert, Broadcast, Spring Tour K,. * * ;ยง Program * *.-* v Will Honor Indepen de Lt omen Dr. Newcomb To Deliver Address on 'Social Atavism in the Atomic Age' Assembly Recognition Night, hon- oring independent women who have been outstanding in scholarship and extra-curricular activities, will be held at 8 p. m. tonight in the Ball- room of the League. Following the theme, "Assembly Launches Into a New Year," to- night's event will mark the third year that Recognition Night has replacedAssembly Dinner, held an- nually before the war. Guest speaker for the evening will be Dr. Theodore M. Newcomb of the sociology department who will speak on "Social Atavism in the Atomic Age." Dr. Newcomb spent the past Radar .. . (Continued from Page 1) in interfering with radar mechan- isms of German night fighter air- craft. It has a "horn," or antenna, 150 feet long. Prof. Dow made a six-month trip to England in Nov., 1944, at the re- quest of the National Defense Re- search Committee to put into opera- tion the three "Tubas" used by the British. This device and numerous other counter-measures blinded German radars to an efficiency of 25 per cent and caused German scientists to de- vote so much time to salvaging their own radar defenses that they failed entirely in the development of the superior microwave radar, Prof. Dow pointed out. Radar countermeasures provided one of the chief causes of German unpreparedness in Normany on D-Day. Electronic "bullets" were sent across the Channel to jam most of the Nazi radar sets that were watching for the expected in- vasion. In the Pacific, the anti-radar de- vices protected beach landings, aided mine-laying in strategic Japanese harbors, and guided B-29s through nets of anti-aircraft batteries. Aluminum foil also served an im- portant role in radar defenses. A few ounces of aluminum "chaff" gives a radar reflection comparable to that of three heavy bombers. Equipped with this "chaff" small groups of airplanes, warships and even motor launches appeared as major task forces when viewed on the enemy's radar scopes. Prof. Dow, author of the textbook "Fundamentals of Engineering elec- tronics," made a special study, early in the war, of methods of electronic control for aluminum welders used in airplane fabrication. He is a vacuum tube consultant on the staff of the National Bureau of Standards in Washington, D. C. 'V' Bond Sales Up Sales of Victory Bonds to individ- uals in the $11,000,000,000 Victory Loan campaign totaled today $3,- 260,000,000 of which $860,000,000 was in E Bonds. The individual goal is $4,000,000,000 the E Bond goal is $2,000,000,000. summer in Germany where he was engaged in a study of morale, spon- sored by the War Department. Members of the Women's Glee Club, as well as all independent coeds present will sing the Assembly Song under the direction of Mosako Ono. Ira M. Smith, University registrar, will present scholarship awards fol- lowing the group sing, and Nora Mac- Laughlin, president of League Coun- cil, will then present war activities awards. Ann Schutz will present a short address explaining membership in Mortar Board, Senior Society and Wyvern for those women on the campus who are not acquainted with the honorary societies for which independent coeds are eligi- ble. Singing of favorite Michigan tunes will follow the talk. Present members of Senior Society will conduct the tapping of its new members, refreshments will be served by waitresses dressed in accord with the nautical theme of the affair, fol- lowing the program. Over 600 women will be present at Assembly Recognition Night. Due to an increased demand, addi- tional tickets were made available and final sales were concluded at 5 p. m. Tuesday. Members of the central committee for tonight's presentation include Ellen Hill, chairman; Marge Harring- ton, assistant chairman; Judy Preg- erson, tickets; Sara Simons, scholar- ship; Margaret Thompson, patrons; Dolores Massey, publicity; Alice Ber- berian, program; and Frances Pop- kins, finance. Cabaret Skits To Be Given Groups Will Preview Soph Mistletoe Mingle Skits publicizing the Mistletoe Mingle, 1945 Soph Cabaret, will be presented at noon and dinnertime today and tomorrow in dormitories and larger league houses which were not visited by the groups yesterday. Under the direction of Mary Ellen Gray, the skits, presented by three groups, preview the entertainment open to those attending the Mistletoe Mingle on Saturday, Dec. 8, in the League. Tickets are now on sale in the women's residences and may be pur- chased anytime from the representa- tive of the ticket committee. Tickets will also be sold in the Union and League and at other locations on campus next week. Featured at the Mistletoe Mingle will be dancing to the music of Lowry Clark's orchestra, also the moving picture,r"Made for Each Other," with Carole Lombard and James Stewart. Tickets for the 1945 Soph Cabaret are $1.30 for couples and $.65 for stags. Festivities are scheduled tobegin at 7:30 p.m. in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre with the first performance of the new soph floor show. Following this,"Made for Each Other" will be shown in the theatre. A late floor show, beginning at about 10:30 p. M., will be given after the picture. Dancing will be from 9 p. m. to midnight in the Ballroom. Other en- tertainment includes booths, a mixer, a bridge room and a refreshment room. * * * ASSEMBLY RECOGNITION NIGHT COMMITTEE MEMBERS-- nl (.ss-cIs TO (aveFIt Seie Cuiiteit Famed (horal GlrouI Will Appear Monday "A Russian who does not sing is no Russian," declares Serge Jaroff, Tom- Thumb-like chorus master of the Don Cossacks who will present the fifth Choral Union concert at 8:30 p.m. Monday in Hill Auditorium. Celebrating the twenty-fifth anni- versary of its founding by dimunitive ex-Lieutenant Jaroff, also its fif- teenth American tour, the choral Cossacks have entertained Ameri- cans in more than 100 cities, begin- ning their season before sold-out au- diences at the Metropolitan Opera House in October and ending it with ten weeks at Radio City Music Hall during the summer months. From the Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sofia, where they were established as the official choir for a period, their fame began to spread. Today the Cos- sacks have a million miles behind them and will celebrate their 5,000th concert this season. The singing sol- diers of the steppes each year in- creases their enormous repretoire with newly discovered old songs of Russia, and new songs of New Russia from the Red Army. The chorus last appeared here on the 1943-44 Choral Union series. (Continued from Page 1) facilities, such as offices for student professional activities and rooms for private employment interviews, will be situated on the third floor. The furnishings, decorations and equipment of the building will be in keeping with approved modern ideas. Income from the Foundation endow- Dolores Massey, Marilyn Hale and for the annual event, to be held Ballroom. HIGHLIGHTS ON CAMPUS Harvard Prof. Here . . Prof. Joseph Hudnut, Dean of the faculty of design at Harvard Uni- versity, will speak on "Contemporary Trends in Architecture," at 4:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Rackham Amphb theatre. A former University student, Dean Hudnut has also studied at Harvard and Columbia universities. His teach- ing experience includes positions as professor of architecture at Alabama Polytechnic Institute and the Univer- sity of Virginia, and as professor of architecture at Harvard. This illustrated lecture, presented under the auspices of the School of Architecture, is open to the public, which is invited to attend. * ~* * Lomas To Speak.--- Prof. Charles W. Lomas of the speech department will discuss methods in research at the first meeting this term of the Graduate Study Club of the speech depart- ment at 4:15 p. m. tomorrow in the West Conference room of the Rackham Building. Prof. Lomas has just transferred to the speech department from the staff of Stanford University. The club is organized to enable graduate students and faculty members to discuss problems per- taining to graduate research. :* * * All-N avy Dance . . All campus Naval personnel- V-12, NRO, Marine, Medical and Dental students-are invited to the all-N4avy dance, featuring the Navy Dance Band, from 9 p. m. to mid- night tomorrow in the League Ballroom. Proceeds from the affair will be used to finance the Pelorus, NRO yearbook, which is scheduled for publication at the end of this semester. Tickets, at $1.25 per couple, may be obtained in the office of each battalion commander. Liberty will be granted until 1 a. m. . * Festive Services .. . In place of the regular Friday night services, a festive Sabbath Hannukah service, "Oneg Shabbat," will be held at 7:45 p. m. tomorrow at the Hillel Foundation. The service has been arranged and presented by Avukah, student Zionist organization. Following the service, a Hannukah address will be given by Dr. Judah Goldin, national assistant director of B'nai B'rith Hillel Foun- dations. *~ * *.. Card Sale Opens... A special sale of Christmas cards and Michigan Christmas calendars will be held today, tomorrow and Sat- urday under the sponsorship of the Michigan Alumnae Club. Proceeds will go to the alumnae fund for Hen- derson House, a new women's semi- cooperative residence. Sorority alumnae groups are coop- erating in the project under the di- rection of Mrs. Olin Backett, Barton Hills, chairman of the club's fund raising group. Margaret Kolhaas look over plans at 8 p. m. today in the League Book Exchange Gives Library 27 Used 'texts The Student Book Exchange has turned 27 books over to the Student Lending Library in the Angell Hall Study Hall. These texts were selected from more than 100 unsold books not claimed by their owners at the Ex- change. Books were selected by Mrs. Lillian Rickel, who supervises servic- ing of Lending Library books, on the basis of their condition and their cur- rent use in University courses. One of these books has already been taken out for the remainder of this term. Books are available on a semester basis to students who feel that they cannot afford required. texts and who receive the approval of the deal of their college or his representative. "We were very happy to receive these books from the Exchange," Mrs. Rickel said. "Students who cannot afford to buy all their texts are ap- preciative of such gifts. If anyone has any books he wishes to contrib- ute to our collection, such gifts, will always be welcome." The Lending Library will buy books to add to the present supply if a request for one which is not avail- able is approved. Remaining books at the Exchange will be distributed to drives being conducted for students overseas. Few Complaints Filed with OPA No applications for rental and food price ceiling adjustments have been filed this year with the Detroit office of the OPA by University League houses, according to Hicks Griffiths, Detroit OPA official. Houses charging prices above those that prevailed during the period of April 4-10, 1943, without having first obtained an adjustment from the OPA, are violating OPA regulations and may be subjected to legal action, Griffiths said. Such legal action, involving suits for three times the overcharge in some cases, must be instigated by the person overcharged during a thirty day period immediately following the violation, he pointed out. Following that period the OPA and claimant may file a joint complaint. A few League houses did file appli- cations for adjustments during the spring of 1944 but failed to supply necessary data at that time. Those houses could ask to have their cases reopened in the event they are threatened with financial hardship, Griffiths said. The large nmber of experienced ier" available should make 'hi Gemnester's University Men's Glee Club the finest in several years, Prof. David Mattern of the School of Music, said yesterday. Special quartets are being formed' and concert music is being rehearsed for the year's program, Mattern an- nounced. The Club will hold a reception for the Don Cossack Chorus in the As- sembly Hall of Rackham following their concert here Dec. 3. This will be the seventh time the Club has en- tertained the Russian singers. On Dec. 6 the Glee Club will sing for the State Banker's Association at their convention here. They will pre- sent a broadcast of Christmas music at 2:30 p.m., Dec. 19 and will com- bine with the Women's Glee Club in a Christmas concert at the Lydia Men- delssohn Theater the same evening. Plans are being formulated for a possible spring tour. Before the war the Club took extended trips to New Prizes Offered By Stanford VU Awards Will Be Made For Dramatic Works The Dramatists' Alliance of Stan- ford University is offering four awards in dramatic writing in the eleventh annual competition of the organization. The Maxwell Anderson Award of 100 dollars is offered for verse drama, in either full length or one-act form, while 100 dollars, in memory of The late Miles McKinnon Anderson, is offered for full-length prose drama. Two prizes of 50 dollars will be awarded, one for radio plays in pi'ose or verse and one for dramatic criti- cism. Contestants should send for regis- tration forms and information to the Dramatists' Alliance, Box 200 Z, Stanford University, Calif. All entries must be made before March 20, 1946. Essay Contest Blanks On Hand At Lane Hall An essay contest based on the themes "Why I Am a Christian" or "Why I Am Not a Christian" is cur- rently being sponsored by the Michi- gan Christian Fellowship. All under- graduate students are eligible. The contest began November 13 and will close March 1, 1946. Entry blanks, which may be secured at Lane Hall, must be filed by December 1. Manuscripts should be sent to the Michigan Christian Fellowship Essay Contest, Lane Hall. . First prize for the contest will be $100. Second, third, fourth, and fifth prizes will be $25, $15, $10, and $5, respectively. Separate prizes will be awarded in each field of entry. Information concerning the con- test is available at Lane Hall. California Catalogue Considers Weather "It's a fact!" - the University of California is the only college to men- tion the weather in its catalog of courses, it was discovered in a Michi- gan-sponsored survey of catalogs of the universitiesrofvHarvard, Illinois, Wisconsin, California and Michigan. Half a page was devoted to this topic. 11 anese resistance of Chungking to know.,.. The Japanese North China sum- mary communique published in Tokyo Ashai on January 15, 1944 stated: "Our major enemy has been the Communist Army. Seventy-five per cent of our engagements last year were fought against the Communist forces." Furthermore, it is worth-while to note that the Communists in China do not stand for Communism as their immediate task. Mao Tse-Tung, Gen- eral Secretary of the Communist Party, writes: "For a people being deprived of its national freedom, the revolu- tionary task is not immediate so- cialism but the struggle for inde- pendance. We cannot discuss com- munism if we are robbed of a country in which to practice it." As for the Russian influence, John Gunther, in Inside Asia, writes: "There are no Russian advisors or of ficials with the Chinese Red Army, nor d Russian supplies reach it in any qiantity." And at present, the economy of NorthChina is a simple rural economy. Stating the issue as being Democ- racyvs. Communism can thus be de- clared to be a falsification. North China is not fighting for Communism. On the other hand, are "forces and institutions which rest upon a foun- dation of feudalism, that oppose in- dividual capitalist production, that ally themselves with the Fascist en- emy" to go by the name of democ- racy. In this conflict, world peace is at stake. The world of 1945 must not' repeat the mistakes of the world of 1918. "Twenty-five years ago American fighting men looked to the statesmen of the world to finish the work of peace for which they fought and suffered. We failed them again and expected the world 'to survive again." So spoke Roose- velt, on March 2, 1945, in his report on the Crimean conference. The advent of the atomic bomb does not make his words less true. -S. D. Mehta Forestry Club To Hold Election An election of officers will head the agenda of the Forestry Club at 7:30 p.m. today in Rm. 2039 Natural Sci- ence Building. A committee will be appointed to begin preliminary work on the Paul Bunyan Dance, and the seminar on employment in forestry will be dis- cussed. Plans will be made also for the promotion of a forestry candidate for a Union vice-presidency, Refreshments will be served. Serves as Reistrar Maj. Thomas A. Jensen, former University faculty member has been appointed registrar of the new full- time university at Shrivenham, Eng- land, it was announced yesterday. (iniia . (Conltinuled Yok City, Washington, Chicago, Mil- waukee and Rochester where they appeared before large audiences, in- cluding many Michigan alumni. One of Michigan's oldest organiza- tions, the Men's Glee Club was founded in 1859. There are approxi- mately 2500 alumni members of the group. m g from Page 2) .. . Mortimer E. Cooley ment will supply this equipment and provide for its maintenance. Support Urged Letters urging financial support are being mailed this week by the Cooley Memorial Foundation to alumni of the College of Engineering and others interested in engineering education. The project will be fi- nanced entirely by the donations of Michigan men, which includes ap- proximately 18,000 engineering alum- ni. Each donor's name, regardless of the size of his contribution, will be displayed on a panel in the main lobby of the building. Construction of this building will start as soon as materials are avail- able, and it will be in use in at least two years, Dean Crawford said. Prof. Price To Edit "Titus Andronicus" Prof. Howard T. Price of the Eng- lish department will edit Shake- speare's "Titus Andronicus" for the next Variorum edition of Shake- speare. Prof. Price, who has been doing special work for some time on this play, received the request from the Modern Language Association. The Association picks special editors for each play when a new edition is planned. Ell.dust i 5tad IU1 your ~ one" We mean "captured stardust" or Roger&Gallet dry perfume. Just put some of this pow- dered perfume between two thin layers of cotton and ac- tually tuck it in your"bonnet". It's the cutest surest way of keeping your favorite Roger & Gallet scent with you all the time. Your hair will be fragrant with "captured stardust." J if Committee. Scheduled Meetings Today Positions on the costumes, hostess, and patrons.committees are still open to eligible sophomore women. Coeds may sign for this work in the Under- graduate office of the League. The Central Committee of Soph Cabaret will meet at 7 p. m. today and at 8 a. m. Saturday in the League. All members are asked to be present. The singing .chorus will hold a re- hearsal at 2:30 p. m. today and at 2:30 p. m. and 7 p. m. to 12 p. m. tomorrow in the League. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ART CINEMA LEAGUE presents "VOICE IN THE W IND FRANCIS LEDERER WANTED WANTED: Veteran desires late model automobile. Call Bruce Elliott af- ter 7 p. m. Phone 24551. HELP WANTED STUDENT KITCHEN HELP-dinners only, no Sundays. Mrs. Zimmer, 915 Oakland. Phone 22868. LOST AND FOUND W N. rYONE with informntion LOST: Will the LOW-LIFE who ac- cidentally walked off with a Kodak 35 camera Saturday evening from the Hillel Foundation please return same with film. No questions asked. Reward. LOST: Brown cord handbag contain- ing wallet, keys and gloves. Call Betty Lou Zwemer, Mosher Hall. LOST: Lady's gold wrist watch. Witt- nauer. Probably Washtenaw and North University area. 6893. Re- mo- -a // if I 11 11